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DAVID doesn't usually cover porn directors for obvious reasons, but in the case of FoodFilm, we're happy to make an exception.

FoodFilm - comprised of French directors Michael Roulier and Philipe Lhomme - are renowned for their vibrant approach to food photography, introducing many viewers to the delights of ‘food porn' with their Adventures in Imagination series for Marks & Spencer.

Anyone who's mashed buttons in an attempt to get a human on the phone (so, all of us) knows the hell that is IVR - interactive voice response technology. These savvy ads from director Alex Nicholson take the dread of being told to 'press one for xyz' literally, offering a nightmarish depiction of familiar customer service woes.

From creepy clowns demanding customer ID to terrifying automatons asking us to please stay on the line, each 20" dose of fear is a winning riposte to sanity-sapping tech. Furthermore, the campaign's blend of tongue-in-cheek humour and affectionate production design suggest the brand have a light touch as well as an expert one.

Stacia Akaba rejoins Big Buoy as executive producer.

Big Buoy are pleased to announce the return of Stacia Akaba as their new Executive Producer.

After productive spells at the likes of Envy, Rushes, and Filament Post, Akaba has renewed praise for her old stomping ground: "Big Buoy is a special place. It delivers exactly what it says it will and then some."

Object & Animal say they have signed a "true polymath director" in the shape of Andrew Thomas Huang.

Huang has been plying his trade in the industry for over a decade now, graduating from low-budget short films to highly accomplished promos for the likes of Björk, Atoms for Peace, and FKA twigs at a brisk rate.

Not everyone can think on their feet in a crisis, so it pays to have someone like Tango's ‘Tanguru' in your corner… well, kind of. The soft drink's newest spokesperson appears just when a teenage girl's father discovers a sex toy in her room. The genie helpfully rebrands it a "head massager", yet this only opens another economy-size can of worms.

There's a whiff of ‘Irn-Bru Gets You Through' to the idea, as the brand suggest their's is a drink for those in a crisis. Crucially, however, the ad's knowing enough to compound the awkwardness rather than nullify it.

Despite the refreshingly daring subject matter, this doesn't, well, smack viewers in the face like Tango ads past either. There's a more understated tone to the comedy here - with Tom Kuntz's distinctive voice making a clear contribution - which should play well with the target audience.

Folk-rock fave Marika Hackman's lyrics are often preoccupied with dysfunctional relationships, and latest outing 'I'm Not Where You Are' is no exception. The film opens with a dead-eyed Hackman losing a succession of lovers in the same way - not a single one sparking the barest hint of emotion. Director Will Hooper creates an admirably grungy vibe here, as Hackman's haunting vocals couple with her striking non-reaction.

Fans of LA singer-songwriter Shey Baba get four songs for the price of one as director David M Helman releases his full ‘Requiem' promo-cum-short film. New tracks ‘Requiem' and ‘I Want It All' join ‘Born Sick' and ‘Vertigo', which both featured in Helman's intriguing opening gambit back in April. Definitely one to settle in for.

After the unpleasant public dumping of Marcella Detroit by Siobhan Fahey, it would have been fair to think the froth-goth music of Shakespears Sister was well and truly over. Not so: having put aside their feud, the pair have reunited for this western-themed comeback in which they walk off into the monochrome sunset hand in hand.

FKA twigs spent the last year learning to pole dance purely to realise the video she felt simply had to go with latest song 'Cellophane'. Having started at a time when she was recovering from surgery to remove fibroids, she posted clips of herself practising and becoming ever stronger - and twelve or so months later this promo, courtesy of Andrew Thomas Huang, is the breathtaking result.

Why did no-one think of it before? Of course hip-hop and country are a match made in heaven. It's so obvious listening to this, dammit. Thank you, Lil Naz (real name Montero Hill) for exploding onto the music scene with this magical number, and for asking the universe (okay, Twitter) for Billy Ray Cyrus to contribute a verse.

This hypnotic promo for Dense & Pika's ‘Slowhand' is a phonographic trip. Set deep within the horn of a gramophone, director Ben Parkin's blend of live-action and animation shows precisely what happens when needle meets vinyl… and it involves, to borrow a phrase from Elton John, a tiny dancer. Surreal yet infectiously so.

There's clocking off, and there's clocking off the Jonathan Neguebites way. Those unfamiliar with the passing dancer are in for a treat thanks to this celebratory promo for Heavy Baile, an electronic music collective from Rio de Janeiro. The city's back alleys and railway lines provide an engaging backdrop to Neguebites' joyful, infectious performance.

Mark Ronson fuses steel drums and Scandi-pop in his mellow comeback single ‘Late Night Feelings', as guest vocalist Lykke Li lets inhibitions melt away in the accompanying promo. Director JP Chartrand mainlines 1970s glamour as the Swede cavorts around her swanky pad and melts into her shag carpet - with an uber-quiffed Ronson in her sights.

Hardcore electronic band Sludge get a frenetic promo for their debut track, courtesy of Kenneth Karlstad. With its 90s VHS-style aesthetic and psychoholic skinheads it paints a bleak picture of an Eastern Bloc world where violence rules and victims are initiated into a warped, disorientating reality. Unsettling, original work that doesn't shy away from the track's viscerality.

Electronic duo Gorgon City - comprised of North London producers Kye 'Foamo' Gibbon and Matt 'RackNRuin' Robson-Scott - take sensuality seriously in this visceral promo for latest single 'Delicious'. Combining mouth-watering food photography and the surreal flares of a bad trip, the imagery is just as bold as the track's beat-driven tones.

On the evidence of new track ‘Permenant High School', The Voidz (formerly known as Julian Casablancas + The Voidz) have tempered the batshit excess of their first album for something verging on listenable. Persevere with frontman Casablancas's apathetic drawl and enjoy director Hala Matar's boisterous lo-fi promo.

Country and western singer Lee Ann Womack's ‘Hollywood' tackles a stalling relationship through heartworn lyrics and an unexpectedly moving promo, courtesy of director Chris Ullens and, well, a couple of plastic dolls. Thus, broken hearts and articulated joints are the order of the day in Ullens's Californian toy story.

A mysterious dance in the dead of night propels this compelling promo for Joseph Shabason's ‘I Don't Want to Be Your Love', with Jared Harris (Mad Men, The Terror) confined to the passenger seat yet intimately involved in the ensuing spectacle. Lit by car headlights, a dancer becomes a surrogate for Harris's stricken observer.

This atmospheric promo from APRE accompanies latest single 'Come Down', an initially doomy track which quickly lightens up into anthemic territory. The music offers a jangling backdrop for singer Charlie Brown's echoing vocals, which give the whole affair a hint of 80s flare. The film has a similarly dreamlike, cryptic vibe.

The K-Pop invasion continues as boyband BTS hurtle ever further into the realm of global superstardom - making history as the first Korean act to win Best Group at the Billboard Music Awards. The group's latest promo capitalises on the 'flower boy' trend, with each pastel-soaked frame of film resembling the most skilfully filtered Instagram posts. Pop seems set to stay sugary-sweet this summer.

Crown Prince of Grime Stormzy returns with a low-fi, skulking single which confirms he's staying true to his roots... no matter if people object to him playing Glastonbury. The accompanying promo takes place in an abandoned London - streets empty save for Stormzy and his compatriots.

Languorous and lovely, this promo for Hilton Dresden's 'Cousin John' is a paean to a slower world of romance, longing, and sumptuous fashion. The track itself is a play on 'Cousin Jane' by 60s band The Troggs, and luxuriates in the unhurried unfolding of a love requited. Everyone is beautiful and non-binary; the sensuality of the fabrics and the opulent settings almost tangible.

Since their first release 'Touch The Leather', we at David have followed Fat White Family's wobbly trajectory with interest. This is a band whose ramshackle, controversial, drug-fuelled crystallisation looked instinctively like the most interesting thing to happen to alternative music in a couple of decades. They'd either implode before they got real recognition, or they'd fuse into some new, crazy atom on the periodic table that would freak anyone who came in contact with them.

Australian singer-songwriter Dean Lewis has taken the States by storm in recent years. A former sound engineer, he's written a number of songs which have put him firmly on the musical map, and as a fan of Kodaline's promos he asked director Stevie Russell to make a video for 'Stay Awake'. The music is pretty much for a late teen audience, but the video has a cool road trip vibe about it.

Taylor Swift seems to have given up on the world of grown up pop on her latest album, instead appealing to tweens and younger fans with a candy-coated single offering up such lyrical delights as "you can't spell awesome without me". The accompanying promo is equally sugar-soaked (if much more palatable), with Swift and compatriot Brendon Urie cavorting through a pastel-tinted vision of Paris.

Enigmatic group The Hour has released an excellent follow-up to debut single 'Wasted', continuing their promo collaboration with director Ben Strebel. The theme of anonymity picks up where it left off, with faces concealed as before... but this time, the action takes place in a hospital where one of the masked is giving birth.

For those of you who haven't heard of him, Salvatore Ganacci is a Bosnian-born Swedish EDM DJ who likes to mix things up in a way that extends well beyond his turntables. Sending up the whole onstage froideur of his ilk, Ganacci's presence is as immensely entertaining as his music itself. This promo by Vedran Rupic for 'Horse' tells you all you need to know.

Texas-born singer-songwriter Kris Kelly is in no rush with new single ‘Birthplace', nor is he inclined to sing much above a whisper. While there is therefore little to raise pulses, Kelly's plaintive rumination on memory, purpose, and rebirth has enough to enthral listeners in a wistful mood. Adi Halfin's accompanying promo takes a while to get going, too.

A picture paints a thousand words, and this artful promo for Aldous Harding paints a few more than that. Long shots explore stillness, highlighting the slight movements of the musicians performing, while flashes of nature and birds hint at a deeper yearning for freedom. Stylish work from co-directors Jack Whiteley and Harding herself.